Edit XMP Metadata Online — Free XMP Photo Data Editor

XMP (Extensible Metadata Platform) is Adobe's metadata standard that has become the modern successor to both EXIF and IPTC for descriptive and rights management metadata. XMP data is stored as embedded XML within your image files, making it more flexible and extensible than the fixed-field EXIF and IPTC formats. Adobe Lightroom, Bridge, Photoshop, Capture One, and most professional photo software read and write XMP data as their primary metadata format.

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Why Edit Photo Metadata?

XMP metadata is increasingly the format that matters for professional photography workflows. When you edit photos in Lightroom and export them, the metadata written into the output file is primarily XMP. Stock platforms increasingly prefer XMP over legacy IPTC-IIM because XMP supports richer data structures including multiple creators, hierarchical keywords, and structured rights information. Search engines and AI systems that index images also read XMP data, making it important for discoverability. Rights management through XMP is particularly valuable for photographers and content creators. The xmpRights:WebStatement field can link to your licensing terms. xmpRights:Marked indicates whether the work is copyrighted. xmpRights:UsageTerms specifies how the image may be used. These machine-readable rights fields are recognized by content management systems, DAM platforms, and even some AI training pipelines that filter based on licensing metadata. Editing XMP data is essential when preparing images for distribution across multiple channels. A photo destined for a stock platform needs different keywords and descriptions than the same photo being sent to a news wire or included in a corporate annual report. Our editor lets you customize XMP fields per-destination without re-editing the image itself. The zero-quality-loss guarantee is critical for professional workflows where every generation of compression matters. Binary metadata editing modifies only the XMP segment within the JPEG file structure. The image data passes through completely untouched — no decompression, no canvas rendering, no re-encoding. Your output file has the exact same visual quality as your input.

How It Works

Choose the XMP fields you want to edit in the custom editor interface. The editor supports Dublin Core fields (dc:title, dc:description, dc:creator, dc:subject for keywords, dc:rights), XMP Rights fields (xmpRights:Marked, xmpRights:UsageTerms, xmpRights:WebStatement), and Photoshop schema fields (photoshop:Credit, photoshop:Source, photoshop:Headline, photoshop:City, photoshop:Country). Upload your JPEG files by dragging them onto the page or browsing your device. The tool reads each file as a binary buffer and parses the existing metadata. Your XMP field values are embedded into the appropriate schema namespaces within the XMP data segment. The updated metadata is written back into the JPEG file structure, replacing the original metadata segment while leaving image data completely untouched. Download your files with properly embedded XMP metadata, ready for submission to stock platforms, editorial systems, DAM software, or any workflow that reads XMP data.

More Editing Options

This page is optimized for edit xmp metadata online. Our full EXIF editor supports custom field editing, 5 preset templates, and batch processing across multiple JPEG files — all with zero quality loss.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is XMP metadata?

XMP (Extensible Metadata Platform) is Adobe's XML-based metadata standard. It stores descriptive, rights, and technical information inside image files. XMP is more flexible than EXIF or IPTC because it uses extensible schemas — any type of metadata can be represented. Most modern photo software uses XMP as its primary metadata format.

What is the difference between XMP, EXIF, and IPTC?

EXIF records camera settings (aperture, ISO, GPS). IPTC (IIM) records editorial data (caption, keywords, credit) in a legacy fixed-field format. XMP stores all types of metadata in flexible XML schemas and can represent everything EXIF and IPTC can, plus more. In modern workflows, XMP is the primary format, with EXIF and IPTC maintained for backward compatibility.

Which XMP fields can I edit?

Dublin Core (title, description, creator, subject/keywords, rights), XMP Rights (copyright marked, usage terms, web statement), and Photoshop schema (credit, source, headline, city, country). These cover the most commonly needed fields for stock photography, editorial, and rights management.

Does editing XMP affect image quality?

No. Our tool modifies only the metadata segment of the JPEG file. The image data is never decoded or re-encoded. Zero quality loss is guaranteed — the output is pixel-identical to the input.

Do search engines read XMP metadata?

Some do. Google Images has been shown to read certain XMP fields for image understanding and attribution. AI training datasets also reference XMP rights fields to determine licensing. Properly tagged images are more likely to be correctly attributed and licensed.

Can I edit XMP data on multiple photos?

Yes. Configure your XMP fields once, then upload multiple JPEG files. The same metadata is applied to all images in the batch. Free users get 10 daily uses, Pro subscribers get unlimited.